No, a preposition is often used to describe where usually following a noun, such as in, on, with, by, and etc.
"But" is a coordinating conjecture. Hope this helps.!
The answer is:
<em>A) Aside from a few fresh ingredients, fast food is preproduced, resembling a science experiment more than food preparation.</em>
Because it explains, shortly, the main idea that the text tells.
Fast food preparations methods now are less likely to be found in cookbooks and more likely to be found in trade journals (like a science experiment would), because, everything is already prepoduced (aside some vegetables - fresh ingredients -).
The sentence is using the word "was" instead of the word "were". Using "were" is appropriate for talking about the past tense for plural things. Simply change the words. Hope this helped :))
When Erica has reached the
falling action of the story, the conflict is slowly resolved. Falling action
comes after the conflict after the main problem has been solved and nears the
end of the story. It gives us the satisfaction that we have been rooting for.
lighting or light,the art of illuminating a manuscript.